Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 101, October 10, 1891 by Various
page 35 of 43 (81%)
page 35 of 43 (81%)
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[Illustration] "Respected ANDREW LANG," writes the Baron's Assistant Reader, "I have read your criticism in _Longman's Magazine_ upon Mr. BARRY PAIN's _In a Canadian Canoe_. It's an ugly piece of bludgeon work, I admit, but not convincing to anyone who has read the book of which you speak. You tear away a line or two from the context, and ask your readers to say if _that_ is wit or humour. How your admirers would have protested had any sacrilegious critic ventured to treat one of your own immortal works in this manner. _Essays in Little_, a book which, by the way, appeared in the same series for which Mr. BARRY PAIN wrote, is a pleasant and inoffensive compilation, but even _Essays in Little_ would have presented a sorry appearance if, let us say, ANDREW LANG had reviewed it in this perfunctory and extractory and arbitrary fashion. I remember that in that case the critics were respectfully enthusiastic. Even Mr. BLUDYER would have doffed his cap, I fancy, to one Who rhymes, researches and reviews, Who sometimes writes like Genesis, And sometimes in the _Daily News_. For, after all, you stand high in the journalistic world. Your opinion passes current in many a select circle. Not even your vagaries seem to have power to offend the worshippers to whom your word has long been a law, whether you spoke of golf, of salmon, of folk-lore or of books. The censure of a BLUDYER (I wonder what has brought that formidable name to my mind) can do little to discourage you. But Mr. BARRY PAIN is a young writer. And yet some one remarked that _In a Canadian |
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